Word: seriously
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Students in Electrical engineering at Harvard have in the past had to contend against the serious difficulty of having almost no opportunity for practical manual work. The lack of facilities for such work shop training has been noticed as the number of men taking electrical studies has increased. We are glad to see that arrangements have been made by which students can have the necessary advantages in manuel work. The facilities are still very limited, yet we recognize a great advance over the opportunities of the present year, when no more than two men could do any machine work...
...heartiest support of the university. It is everywhere felt that every effort has been made to send to New London the very best crew that can possibly be got together at Harvard. Neither time, practice nor energy has been spared in the effort. In the face of many serious difficulties, Captain Herrick has made a crew of which it may safely be said that they will row a strong race-a crew which even Yale's veterans will have a hard struggle to defeat. If energy and conscientious work count for anything, surely our crew deserves a victory...
Themes are to be deposited in the wooden box in Sever 3 not later than 4 o'clock. By the regulations, no overdue theme will be accepted unless the writer satisfies the secretary that his failure to present it at the appointed time was caused by serious illness or other unavoidable hindrance...
...that the conditious under which the game was played were all against Harvard. The loose work in the field and weakness at the bat can be attributed to the very natural nervousness on the part of an untried team, overconscious of its own weakness. We see no reason for serious discouragement on account of the loss of the first Princeton game; on the contrary the renewea incentive to hard work which the loss furnishes together with the experience gained from the game, ought to result in such an improvement in the nine that the result of our second championship game...
...would give rise to serious complications. e. g. (a) When the president or either house were of different political parties; (b) when the conduct of the cabinet becomes objectionable to congress, but is sanctioned by the president:- Pomeroy's Constitutional Law, pp. 121-22; Wilson's Congressional Government, p. 269; Nation, vol. 16, p. 233; Nation. vol. 28, p. 243; speech of Mr. Thayer, thirty-eighth congress, second session...